About Idylle by Johnny Golden Album
Johnny Golden - Idylle album info will be updated!
Johnny Golden - Idylle album info will be updated!
No | Song Title | Artist | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Deeper | Johnny Golden | 4:38 |
2. | Into The Night | Johnny Golden | 4:38 |
3. | Rauschen | Johnny Golden | 4:07 |
4. | Idylle | Johnny Golden | 4:40 |
5. | Where Is My Mind | Johnny Golden | 5:05 |
6. | Electrified | Johnny Golden | 5:03 |
7. | Rumble In The Jungle | Johnny Golden | 3:33 |
8. | Dark Pattern | Johnny Golden | 4:10 |
9. | Burn It Up | Johnny Golden | 3:49 |
10. | Do You Want? | Johnny Golden | 4:11 |
11. | Modulation | Johnny Golden | 5:07 |
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Idylle is a piece for violin and piano composed by Edward Elgar in 1884, as his Opus 4, No. 1. Appended to the title is the description Esquisse Facile, which means "Easy Sketch". It was Elgar's first published work. It is dedicated to "Miss E. E., Inverness", and first published by Beare & Son in 1885. John Beare was the brother-in-law of Elgar's friend Dr. Charles Buck. Elgar was a young unmarried man of 27 when he met the "Miss E. E." of the dedication whilst on holiday in Scotland in the summer of 1884. It is notable that she shared his initials. He recorded four meetings with her in a diary, but did not reveal her name: the first meeting was on a loch boat to Oban, and the final meeting was at Inverness, with flowers from him before a last adieu. The work was composed when he returned home from the holiday. It seems appropriate and may be significant that the music contains the Scotch snap rhythm at the end of the principal subject. The work was later published by Ashdown in 1910.
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